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Author: Spivak, John L. (John Louis), b. 1897
Subject: Secret service -- Germany; Propaganda, German
Publisher: New York, Modern age books, inc
Year: 1939
Possible copyright status: NOT_IN_COPYRIGHT
Language: English
Digitizing sponsor: MSN
Book contributor: Prelinger Library
Collection: prelinger_library; additional_collections; americana
Full catalog record: MARCXML
This book has an
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Open Library.





Reviewer:
RobertKhan -





Subject:
Admin
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Reviewer:
endisnear -





Subject:
the end IS near
"Now showing in theaters everywhere!"
Wake up and smell the fascism.
Reviewer:
pritch1 -





Subject:
England's Cliveden Set
The book is not just about America. Chapter 2 is very interesting indeed for anyone interested in British policy at that time.
Reviewer:
SergieJ -





Subject:
Hilarious piece of Soviet-type propaganda
Outstanding and hilarious piece of anti-German propaganda!
Written by an Czech,looks like, and even uses absolutely the same language to describe Germans as Soviet conspiracy authors used to describe the evil American imperialist spies somewhat later!
Gestapo agents roaming Holland with passports valid for 14 days that are somehow supposed to prevent them from defecting are a real gem!!!
Reviewer:
notmtwain -





Subject:
Nazi Use of Fifth Column Technique in Pre-war Europe
Writing in 1939, the author reviews the period 1937 to 1939 when the Nazis were able to obtain all of their desires for expansion (Austria, Czechoslovakia, the Ruhr, etc.) without having to fight. They used negotiation, intimidation and their foreign agents to influence foreign policy in Britain and other major foreign powers. They also used the influence of the wealthy, whose fear of communism led them to favor the development of fascist countries. The author warns about similar techniques being used within the United States-- to keep us out of the war and to weaken us in the event of war. To me, the story was enlightening and plausible. Most other histories I've seen of this period gloss over the details, so I enjoyed reading it. It is one man's view of the coming debacle and must have been enlightening to some people during the period before America entered the war.
| Identifier: | secretarmiesb00spivrich |
| Mediatype: | texts |
| Pick: | 1 |
| Copyright-evidence-operator: | krisbrix |
| Copyright-region: | US |
| Copyright-evidence: | Evidence reported by krisbrix for item secretarmiesb00spivrich on Jul 19, 2006; visible notice of copyright and date; stated date is 1939; not published by the US government; a copyright renewal record could not be found. |
| Copyright-evidence-date: | 2006-07-19 17:54:33 |
| Scanningcenter: | rich |
| Operator: | scanner-dave-lee |
| Scanner: | rich2 |
| Scandate: | Mon Feb 27 13:09:23 PST 2006 |
| Filesxml: | Mon Feb 27 22:38:00 GMT 2006 |
| Identifier-ark: | ark:/13960/t4wh2dm0x |
| Identifier-access: | http://www.archive.org/details/secretarmiesb00spivrich |
| Imagecount: | 168 |
| Ppi: | 500 |